Meadow

Meadow in the Wildlife Garden

Meadows are open areas of grassland, untouched by artificial fertilisers and closed to grazing animals during the spring and summer months. They are characterised by a wealth of colourful flowers before they are cut and turned back into grazing land during the winter. With their variety of wild flowers and grasses they form an important habitat for many species of insect and other invertebrates.

History

Flower-rich meadows have evolved over hundreds of years through a combination of hay cutting and winter grazing. While pasture is grassland that is generally grazed throughout the year, meadows are closed to animal grazing in spring. The plants are left to grow and set seed until mid to late summer when the hay crop is harvested. The cut hay is left to dry for a few days before being baled up, collected and stored for use as animal fodder. After a few weeks growth the meadows are then grazed from late summer or autumn until the following spring.

Features

The plant species found in meadows varies according to local climate and soil conditions as well as the timing of cutting and grazing.

Habitat for wildlife

Apart from the colour and beauty of the plants, meadows are valuable for a wide range of insects. In the spring, orange-tip (Anthocharis cardamines) butterflies lay their eggs on Cuckooflower (Cardamine pratensis). Meadow browns (Maniola jurtina) and skipper butterflies depend on different grasses, such as cock's-foot (Dactylis glomerata) and Yorkshire fog (Holcus lanatus), to lay their eggs in summer, while bumblebees and hoverflies depend on the many nectar-rich flowers.

Habitat loss

Most of Britain's meadows were destroyed by the intensification of farming methods after the Second World War. As hedges were removed to increase the size of fields, flower-rich meadows were also ploughed and cultivated for arable crops. Others were ploughed and re-sown as 'improved' grassland, which is a mixture of two main species, rye grass and clover. Growth in this environment is encouraged by chemical fertilisers. Many meadows have also disappeared through urban expansion. By 1984 the total area of meadowland was estimated at just 3% of the 1930 level.

Managing meadows

Meadows on some of the less accessible slopes of chalk grassland remain unharmed, as do some damp and isolated meadows. A few have been protected as nature reserves with traditional management methods. Increasingly, meadow creation schemes are reversing the trend of 'improved' grassland by stripping and re-sowing with seeds from unimproved meadows.

Unmanaged grassland will gradually revert to scrub and eventually to woodland.

Meadow in the Museum's Wildlife Garden

The Wildlife Garden meadow includes a colourful mix of plants including:

buttercups

meadow cranesbill (Geranium pratense)

betony (Stachys officinalis)

meadow vetchling (Lathyrus pratensis)

common knapweed

bird's-foot-trefoil (Lotus corniculatus)

yellow rattle

Our meadow attracts many insects including common blue butterfly (Polyommatus icarus). Its caterpillar feeds off bird's-foot-trefoil. During May and June azure damselflies (Coenagrion puella) may also be seen foraging amongst a variety of plants. Tiny froglets and toadlets migrate to the meadow in June and July. Our sheep come and graze during late summer and early autumn.

Meadow in your garden

Small meadows can be created in gardens instead of lawns, or alongside them. It is unlikely that a garden meadow will be large enough to feed meadow butterfly larvae but the flowers are an attractive addition on their own and are refuges for a number of invertebrates. A lawn fringed with oxeye daisies and buttercups reminds us of the countryside in early summer. Many specialist nurseries sell native meadow plants and seeds.